The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 22, 1923, Image 6

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    WHO WORK
firs. Lodic Tells How Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound Helped Her
nd how
Pa.— “A friend told my hus.
had a nervous weak
{Iness, no strength in
and pains
in my left side so
bad that I could
hardly do my work.
Before I was mar
ried I used to work
in tae factory, and I
had pains just the same then as I have
had since [ have done my housework. I
would not be without a bottle in thd
house now. It has Stopped the pains all
right and I have found out that itis a
wonderful body builder, as it has made
me well and strong. It is going to be
the ‘old reliable’ with me hereafter,
and I am always willing to tell other
women how it has helped me. You can
use this letter as you wish as I can hone
estly say that my words are true.”’—
Mrs. M. Lobic, F.D. No. 4, Box 40,
Tyrone, Pa.
Jers like this brin
of Ly
ia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
ains and ailments after taking Lydia E. |
inkham's Vegetable Compound.
A - -
What They Missed.
‘Two newshoys went to u perform |
ance of “Hamlet,” In the last scenes, |
after Hamlet had killed Laertes and |
the king, and the queen had died of |
and Hamlet of a poisoned |
wound, one of the newshoys ex- |
claimed: “Golly, Jim, what a time |
thint must have been for extras.”
Poison
A Safe and Sure Laxative
Brandreth Pills. ® One or two taken at
time will keep you in good condi
tion, Entirely vegetable —Ady.
re!
Not So Wasteful.
Efficiency Expert—you are wasting
toe much thoe on your personal
pearance,
Stenographer—It's not wasted. ['ve
only here six months and I'm
already engaged to the junior partner,
The American Legion Weekly
fp
heen
Bore and inflamed eyes, sties znd granuia-
tions healed promptly by nightly use of
Reman Eye Balsam 38 cents Ady
The Age Limit,
“So oid Witherbee
agnin, Is the bride very young?”
“Young cnough to better.”
to be marri=y
I~
know
All popular SONZS are composed, nnd
soe ure decomposed.
tiches may have wings, but poverty
I« seldom a quitter,
fn. behalf of Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery. 1 cannot rec-
ommend it too highly to the publie.
We have used it in our family for
years and have reaped good results,
We have always found the ‘Discov
ery’ superior to any other tonic—it
fs a wonderful! system builder. I
ean cheerfully recommend it.'e=
EB. J. Carper, Box 4.
As soon as you begin to take this |
“Discovery” you begin to feel its i
bracing, appetizing effect. Buy of |
your neighborhood drug store In
tablets or liguid, or send 10c to
Dr. Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel, in Buf
falo, N. Y., for trial pkg. of tablets,
and write for free medical advice.
Stop their pain
in one minute!
For quick lasting relief corns,
Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads stop the pain
in one minute by removing the cawe
~friction and pressure.
Zino-pads are thin, safe, antiseptic,
wat and cannot
healing, Saserproot bad brow ig
Three sizes—for callouses and
ifle. Get a box toe
shoe dealer's,
Thanksgiving
in Days of
Grandmother
UR grandmothers
preparation for Thanks
glving duy long before
it arrived. Pickles of
all sorts, apple sauce
and preserves were pre-
pared alead of time,
Mince meat was mixed
that it might ripen and
began
vegetables wére ready for the pot on
Wednesday night, the chickens or tur-
key were stuffed, the puddings and ples
were prepared and there was nothing
to do on Thanksgiving day but cook
dinner,
Garnishes and Turkey Stuffing.
Oysters belong to Thanksgiving, ae-
because friendly
A gar
ap-
or
the turkey,
or oyster soup be
turkey, or
my
may be molded
out with a fancy that
oyster appears In
cuti*r so
lettuce leaves with
with two cupfuls of coarse bread
¢frumbs or cracker crumbs and
soning Is a fine stuffing for the turkey
To prepare chestnuts for a stuffing,
first gash the shell the nuts
over with beef drippings and put In
oven for a few minutes. When
heated, shell and skin are easily re
Cut the nuts in small pieces,
add them to an ordinary bread
mixture, or they mas put through
sea
brush
he
goo for a
pound of
cupful
Sausage croquettes
turkey garnish. Buy one
sausage meat, add to it
of soft bread crumbs, form
the =ize of English walnuts,
are
one
dip In
fry in deep hot fat,
Cranberries With Turkey.
Leftover the
and
turkey, especially
ut in cubes
blended with enough warm
Jelly, not too sweet, to hold it In shape
when cold,
The combination of cranberries and
raisins, popularly known as mock
cherry, Is good for a pie filling or as
a The half
as raisins and
should
conserve proportion is
many ag cranberries
be cut halves,
in
Old fashioned Cranberry
sauce {rom one
and one-half
two
Prepare a cranberr)
quart of or
cupfuls of water and
sugar, Make biscuit
two cupfuls of flour,
of
inherries, one
cupfuls of
up a dough with
four teaspoonfuls
teaspoonful
one
oonfuls
baking powder
salt, two tables; of butter,
¢
of
dough into rounds and steam them
cupful milk. Shape
the
with
minutes Serve
accompanied
twelve
by “
sauce,
cranberry
Cranberry Punch. —Cook one
cranberries in three cupfuls of |
until soft, then press through |
Add two and one-half cup |
of sugar and the juice of two |
and stand on for about |
four hours to chill. Serve in glasses |
quart
i
ice
Menus to Choose. i
Yellow is “the Thanksgiving color, |
is effective to}
in basket form
to be filled with nuts and raisins at
each plate.
I
Oysters on the Half Shell
Cream of Celery Soup.
Bolled Codfish with Egg Sauce,
Roast Turkey with Cranberry Molds,
Mashed White Potatoes
Baked Sweet Potatoes
Lettuce and Tomato Jelly Salad.
Toasted Wafers Spread with Cheese.
Pumpkin Ple.
Baked Indian Pudding with Cream or
Scraped Maple Bugar,
Ice Cream. Nuts, Apples,
Grapes
Coffer and Sweet Clder
IL
Oyster Soup with Crisped
or Oysters in Ice,
Thin Slices of Buttered Brown or
Graham Bread
Roast Turkey with Stuffing.
Mashed White Potatoes.
(Glazed Sweet Potatoes,
Mashed Turnips. Cranberry Jelly.
Celery. Lettuce Salad.
Crackers. Cheese,
Pumpkin, Mince or Cranberry Pie,
Apples. Grapes Nuts,
Raisins,
Coffee or Bweet Cider.
11
Cream of Celery Soup
Pickles, Celery.
Roast Turkey with Peanut or Chestnut
Btufing.
Mashed Potatoss. Buttered Turnips.
Pumpkin Custard
Quinces In Cider and Molasses
Tomato Salad,
Brown Bread Sandwiches, *
Old-Fashioned Cranbérry Dumplings,
Grandmother's Rich Pumpkin Ple.
Nuts, Raisins Fruit,
Coffee.
‘ Doughnuts.
One cupful granulated sugar, a pinch
of salt, two tablespoonfuls of butter,
two eggs, one cupful of sweet milk,
three teaspoonfuls of baking powder.
Flavor with vanilla. Flour enough
roll well, Roll in pulverized ' sugar
Crackers
n the little ones mingle in
And let us remember that tale
It waved o'er the famishing
Who struggled and labored
them then
And the fame of their bravery
in praise
Copyright. 191), Western Newspaper Union
frolic and play,
Y
x
of the past, 5
3
land.
——
iN PAIN, omg —
I A
{
never Sob |
fi
—F. H. Swe | ( i
N THESE days
and rustie, the
Thanksgiving
of all remind
what wondrous changes |
time . has wrought. The!
Thanksgivings of our
and those of
alike than
the dan
present and
of rush
advent of
Serves most
to us of
fathers
day no tore
uet and the fox trot,
well typify the era of the
the past About the only thing left to
us from out of the old & is the
Thanksgiving turkey. and even this
bird is not now held sacred nec:
{o-
ure the min
es that
¥s
and
festiva
the word |
mind a |
have |
The
Thanksgiving
that
turned to
th time
he
of
to
conditions
mention
brings
modern
the wall
when life
rolist
vers
the
It is a pleture of |
was simple in its}
its strength;
folks
the race and rivalry of life did not ex-
pleasures and
when people were really w hen
over the entire |
has now
in the |
ploneers |
tend their office hours
day That
passed away. It has followed
wake and the of the
and the other figures of the American |
national life that was but is not.
In the old days there were tippets |
state of things
trail
ory's closet on the |
saufe nall as the
Ligh stock. men's |
shawls and daguer- |
rotypes. Gone are |
the marvelous tip- |
when baked.
pets that went
round and round |
the neck until a |
person was
swathed like a
mummy of an |
cient Egypt. Gone, |
too, are the
mitt'ns knit at
home in colors of |
sunset and sun
rise blue, those
cony ancedtors of |
gloves. As for the
bootjack, in these
days of luxury and ready-made shoes
it is as unknown as any creature of
the prehistoric age.
No longer does Thanksgiving bring
the real mince pie, that culinary tri
umph of every well-regulated house
hold, with its wonderful fruity flavor,
that cunningly combined the qualities
of solidity and crispness, a ple that
even if dangerous to health made a
danger well worth facing and putting
down. Compared with the bakery-
built substitute of today the mince
ple of those days was a vintage pie,
as far above its modern rival as a
vintage wine is above the grocery wine
for cooking use. Its existence was a
splendid testimonial to the physical
traits of the men and women of the
era in which it flourished.
Even the plum pudding, that carnl
val of richness, is disappearing from
the stage. It is giving way to ice
cream, that mollycoddie of digestion
that invites to slow eating and delib-
erate enjoyment,
The Thanksgiving stage Is now set
with new scenes and new characters
There is the cabaret and terrapin, and
football and the theater, There in the
social function in place of the family
festival; and In the evening hours the
elaborate entertainment in the gilded
ballroom, In place of the homely dunce
to the strains of the fiddle and the
bow and the ministrations of the
merry, squeaking fiddler. Truly, the
coming of this holiday and its observ.
unce well measures the distance that
the nation has gone from Its life and
its habits In the days when Thanks
giving day was young.
HEE PPP PP EEIESOCIPOEOS PPE OPEPOE
| Observance
of
' Thanksgiving
HRM nnn
SPD
nnn nnn
HE celebration of Thanks
giving day
aud curious history,
which It Is the
of 4 woman to
inconspicuous part.
earliest aspect of
SITET RRR REIN
-
-
has a
province
The
the
NZ
ites,
tion
of
there
chronicles
whom
the
in
the Bible of days
set apart for special thanksgiving unto
the Lord. Later the custom
uncommon In England before
Reforination, and was taken up
continued by the Protestants
ward
Israel
among
throughout
the
nnd
Thus it was that at its inception
for this celebration it
sone
Sornetitees
served once a year,
times
or
twice, and then perhaps a year
two would be skipped-—aceording
themselves or not
Among the colonists It was cusiom
ary for the president to issue a proc
ing, with proper ceremony, at
* » . . . - ®
have continued In vogue indefinitely
ous efforts of Mrs, Sarah J. Hale, ed
She
devoted herself to the task of writing
to all the governors of the different
states and territories, urging upon
them the propriety of a national
thanksgiving and suggesting thé last
Thursday in November as the day for
such celebration. She continued to
write these letters year after year, and
was finally rewarded for her efforts
by all the governors, excepting two,
granting her request,
However, the people's response was
not enthusiastic, and during the Civil
war, especially In the South, the cus
tom lagged.
Immediately after the battle of Get.
tysburg Mrs. Hale wrote President
Lincoln, inclosing a copy of Washing.
ton's Thanksgiving proclamation, and
suggesting that he also proclaim a day
of national thanksgiving. The Pres.
ident acted upon her suggestion and
issued a proclamation “forthe ob-
servance of Thursday, August 8
as a day of national thanksgiving,
praise and prayer.”
From that time on the celebration
of the day lost its local and variable
character and took on the fitting dig:
nity of a national and stable cere
mony. Lincoln's successor appointed
the Iast Thursday In November as
Thanksgiving day, and the date has
continued unchanged ever since.
Thanksgiving day is a legal holiday
in every state, territory and posses
sion except Utah, where it Is observed,
though mot on the statute books.
UNSPOKEN THANKSGIVING
A sunny face Ib an unspoken
Thanksgiving.
¥
YAN] gh
aN (AE
BONNER.
COPrmim® 7 wit? ihn wiw fare
NORTHERN SHRIKE BIRD
“The birds,” sald Daddy, “are
frightened of Mr. Northern Shrike who
has black wing
and a black tall
with touches of
white, He has a
black spot behind
the eye and his
biddy is of a gray-
ish black color,
“He Is about
the size of a rob
in, and 1 must
tell you later
about the
saw the
duy. I've
secing a
many birds
fall—It seems
though
were lute in
ting Northern
Shrike come down to us in the winter
uns
No Birds About.
get
away, Of course the
‘way South have pot as yet
“There is an kind of a sociability
about the birds at this time that some
is no-
The
always be
At least |
especially to
have noticed It
cow birds having a regular
when I've seen
together
“1 don’t know
many of them
high up In the alr
their soft, beautiful volces,
Worthern Shrike
Shrikes
white
“Mr lies cousins
The Log
wiistconls
blacker
Shrikes
Shrikes
it's a gray
and
than
wear
black
of the
| %
8
BOCK
touches
their
{hose
are
Northern
though iid the Northern
have bi touches often
for gray
The Loggerheads are a Hitle small
er than the Northern Shrikes
whistle In thelr harsh way and
and leuves
“Thes
BOVEn CES
gerhonds
things
nbout five or
that
along
ny
wey little
the
many Log
to do
has always
fine
their de
in
Shrike, it
family
lighted doing
is true, est grasshop
mice
to. And they
can und
upon thorns or twigs,
birds
more
their
kill
eal eave
nang ing so that
often they are called butcher birds
cause their bowes look like
Shops,
“The
wich
Northern Shrikes have
They have
the feet of other small
yard il
thew to hold their prey on thelr grasp
ure barred
are lke
gud it is aime itupossible
pulling with thelr beaks
“But they leave u great desl on the
thorns which they do not want to eat
that Is the worst part of them
“And, too, it shows such a
“But Mr. Northern Shrike
about for him when sud
“What had happened!
“And what do you suppose had hap
*1 can't possibly guess” sald Nancy.
“Neither can 1” sald Nick,
“Teil wus, please, Daddy”
Nancy.
“A brave little robin had warmed the
other birds that the shrike was
nearby,
“Yes,
drged
he had been brave and had
near to make
“And he
escaped, too!
“Oh. how mad
Mr. Northern
Shrike was! “3
wanted to have a
good hunt today,
he sald to himself,
“I'nis weather Is
so bracing and
makes me feel like
marketing in my
usual wild fash.
fon,’
“But Mr. North
ern Shrike was
pot to do his
marketing in the A Brave Little
way he had Robin.
pinnned.
“He was not going to find birds in
the market, for the birds had all been
warned away and he grumbled to hime
soif: %
“ ‘Birds aren't in the market today.
Wretched, wretched, wretched I
“But the birds, as you may imagine,
didn't think it was wretched at all
“They were thankful they were safe-
ly away from Northern Shrike, and
now that they had started moving, they
thought it would be a good time to con.
tinue their journey south--to be gone
all winter.”
had
\¥
Is Your Work Hard?
Is your Work wearing you out?! Are
you tortured with throbbing backache
feel tired, weak and discournged? Then
lock to your kidneys! Many occups-
tions tend to weaken the kidoeys., Con
stant backache, headaches, dizziness
and rheumatic pains are the natural
result. You suffer annoying bladder
irregularities; feel nervous, irritable
and worn out, Don’t wait! Use Doan's
Kidney Pills. Workers everywhere
recommend Doan’s. They should help
you, wo. Ask your neighbor!
A Virginia Case
Z T. Wade, re-
tired farmer and
Justice of the
ence Maple Ave.
tocky Mount, Va.
says: “I was much :
annoyed by a dull BAN
neggling burt}
which seemed tc
be tearing my back
in pleces., I was
easily tired. Morn-
ings I was hardly
able to drag myself about. M
neys didn’t act as they should el-
ther, 1 began using Doan's Kidney
Pills and two boxes benefited me.”
Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c & Box
DOAN’S ®pner
FOSTER -MILBURN CO., BUFFALG, MK. ¥.
DISTEMPER
COMPOUND
Are your horses cough-
ing or running at the
nose! If so, give them “SPOHN'S.”
A valuable remedy for Coughs,
Colds, Distemper, Influenza, Pink
Eye and Worms among horses and
mules. An occasional dose “tones”
them up. Sold at all drug stores
Ma LUE RETR RY RE] ETRYS
YOUR BODY NEEDS
STRENGTH OF IRON
HIRTY years ago physicians
began to prescribe Gude's
Pepto-Mangan because it pro-
vided a form of iron which was
easily digested and did not affect
the teeth. Now is the season when
you especially need it. Your drug-
gist has it, in both liquid and tablets.
Free Trial Tablets To see for yourself
the bemith building
value of Gude's Pepto-Mangan, write today
for generous Trial Package of Tablets. Send
Bo money —— just mame and sddress to
NM. J. Breitenbach Co., 53 Warren St, XN. Y.
Gude’s
Pepto-Mangan
CONTAINS NO QUININE
Special Offer: Mail this advertisement with
50 cts. for a full size bottle to the Babek Company
Washington, D. C. "Money back if not satisfied ™
Every woman is a judge and fury
unto her own husband,
WOMEN! DYE FADED
THINGS NEW AGAIN
Dye or Tint Any Worn, Shabby Gar
ment or Drapery.
Diamond Dyes
Each 15<ent package of “Diamond
contains directions so simple
that any woman can dye or tint any
even if
Choose
any color at drug store—Advertise
taent.,
Thinking counts little unless you act
Hall's Catarrh
Medicine: mh
Treatment, both
local and internal, and has been success.
ful in the treatment of Catarch for over
forty years. Sold by all druggists.
F. J. CHENEY & CO. Toledo, Ohio
Your
Coughs
and Colds
FOLEY'’S
HONEY«TAR
ESTABLISHED 1875
Lancest Sevume Coucn Meme sv ne Wontd
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES
i